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Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America by Ijeoma Oluo
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Mediocre Quotes Showing 1-30 of 103
“How often have you heard the argument that we have to slowly implement gender and racial equality in order to not “shock” society? Who is the “society” that people are talking about? I can guarantee that women would be able to handle equal pay or a harassment-free work environment right now, with no ramp-up. I’m certain that people of color would be able to deal with equal political representation and economic opportunity if they were made available today. So for whose benefit do we need to go so slowly? How can white men be our born leaders and at the same time so fragile that they cannot handle social progress?”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“Perhaps one of the most brutal of white male privileges is the opportunity to live long enough to regret the carnage you have brought upon others.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“And yet we have, as a society, somehow convinced ourselves that we should be led by incompetent assholes.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“How can white men be our born leaders and at the same time so fragile that they cannot handle social progress?”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“When I talk about mediocrity, I talk about how we somehow agreed that wealthy white men are the best group to bring the rest of us prosperity, when their wealth was stolen from our labor.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“Plenty of women have met the “male feminist” who can quote bell hooks but will use those quotes to speak over you. Plenty of people of color have met the white antiracist who is all for Dr. King’s dream until people of color start asking white people to make actual sacrifices for racial justice. Ego can undermine even the best of intentions, but often, when things like this happen—when someone we trust as an ally ends up taking advantage of their position and then turning against the principles they once claimed to fight for when that abuse is discovered—we find that the intentions were never that great in the first place.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“While we would like to believe otherwise, it is usually not the cream that rises to the top; our society rewards behaviors that are actually disadvantageous to everyone. Studies have shown that the traits long considered signs of strong leadership (like overconfidence and aggression) are in reality disastrous in both business and politics.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“But when I tell my sons that they should be feminists, I don’t try to sell it to them based on the benefits they will reap. I tell them what I also tell white people who are looking for reasons to be antiracist: Yes, it will offer some real benefits for you. Your life will be better in many ways when we work to end oppression. But it will not always benefit you. Sometimes it may seem like justice is disadvantaging you when the privileges you’ve routinely enjoyed are threatened. But you have to do it anyway, because you believe that women and people of color are human beings and that we deserve to be free from oppression, even when that means you personally have to give some things up.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“We must start asking what we want white manhood to be, and what we will no longer accept. We must stop rewarding violence and oppression. We must stop confusing bullies with leaders. We must stop telling women and people of color that the only path to success lies in emulating white male dominance.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“It should be enough that this is hurting us. It is insulting that I have to point out the ways in which these issues also hurt white Americans in the hopes that I might get more people to care.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“A political movement that focuses on class and ignores the specific ways in which race determines financial health and well-being for people of color in this country will be a movement that maintains white supremacy, because it will not be able to identify or address the specific, race-based systems that are the main causes of inequality for people of color. Health care discrimination, job discrimination, the school-to-prison pipeline, educational bias, mass incarceration, police brutality, community trauma—none of these issues are addressed in a class-only approach. A class-only approach will lift only poor whites out of poverty and will therefore maintain white supremacy.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“Each day he sat quietly outside and refused to join his classmates at lunch. After three days, Ryan’s mother relented and began making lunches from home again. Nothing says “American” like a boy making a woman struggle so that he can seem independent.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“Ours is a society where white culture is normalized and universalized, while cultures of color are demonized, exotified, or erased.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“When you can’t keep women out anymore, and you can’t force them all to become secretaries or teachers because modern social politics demand that you at least pretend to support gender equality in the workplace, what can you do to keep women out of powerful positions in business? You can set them up to fail—or, to be more accurate, you set them up to fall.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“White male identity is in a very dark place. White men have been told that they should be fulfilled, happy, successful, and powerful, and they are not. They are missing something vital - an intrinsic sense of self that is no tied to how much power or success they can hold over others - and that hole is eating away at them.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“As white men saw that their degrees no longer put them as far ahead of women and people of color as the degrees once did, they began to question whether a diploma was worth the cost.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“It's the expectations that many white men have that they shouldn't have to climb, shouldn't have to struggle, as others do. It's the idea not only that they think they have less than others, but that they were supposed to have so much more. When you are denied the power, the success, or even the relationships that you think are your right, you either believe that you are broken or you believe that you have been stolen from.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“Women and people of color who advocate for diversity and equity are often punished for their efforts in peer, team, and management evaluations. Ironically, the people who are not penalized in their evaluations for their diversity and equity efforts are—say it with me—white men.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“The thing about anger is that it needs a home.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“Sometimes it may seem like justice is disadvantaging you when the privileges you’ve routinely enjoyed are threatened. But you have to do it anyway, because you believe that women and people of color are human beings and that we deserve to be free from oppression, even when that means you personally have to give some things up.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“Most women and people of color have to claw their way to any chance at success or power, have to work twice as hard as white men and prove themselves to be exceptional talents before we begin to entertain discussions of truly equal representation in our workplaces or government.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“Lord, give me the confidence of a mediocre white man.” When writer Sarah Hagi said those words in 2015, they launched a thousand memes, T-shirts, and coffee mugs.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“But often these men are completely unaware of their hypocrisy because they are not doing anything out of the ordinary by centering themselves when they’ve always been centered, or by taking advantage of those who have always been taken advantage of—they’re just living according to the norms of society.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“Whiteness is not only threatened when it takes on too many traits of identities of color; it is also threatened when communities of color cease to stay below whiteness, where society’s scripts say they belong. A white family may feel threatened not only when their daughter brings a Black man home for dinner (breaking from what is expected of her as a white person), but also if that Black man makes the same wage as her father (breaking from the expectations of Blackness that whiteness depends on). The same is true for masculinity. Men may feel threatened not only when their sons declare their love of the color pink, but also when their daughters choose monster trucks over dolls.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“We have to find where we have been bonded to these systems, both individually and collectively, and we have to sever those bonds.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“Does this sound like too large a task? Too monumental a shift? I can see that. But I can also see how much work it has taken to create and maintain a system of white male mediocrity in this country.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“We have to investigate the way in which all of us, regardless of race or gender, have been conditioned to uphold white male supremacy.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“At every college I went to—every single one—at least one teacher of color broke down in tears describing their struggle to advocate for their students of color in such a hostile environment. Higher education is not the racial utopia that Republicans are scared of. It is not some bizarro world where students of color wield power over white students and faculty. It is a white supremacist system at its core, like all our other systems are.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“But over generations, feminism has grown and changed. There is still what is called “white feminism”—the tendency for white feminists to center themselves at the expense of women of color—but at least now we have a name for it. And in naming it, we can think about how to move beyond it.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America
“The man who never listens, who doesn’t prepare, who insists on getting his way—this is a man that most of us would not (when given friendlier options) like to work with, live with, or be friends with. And yet we have, as a society, somehow convinced ourselves that we should be led by incompetent assholes.”
Ijeoma Oluo, Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America

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